Stephen Jenkins was slain by Indians, with one of his children, 18 July 1694, and his wife, Anne, was carried to Canada with three children. She returned and married David Kincaid of Oyster River. A minute account of her sufferings in captivity may be found in "Old Eliot", Vol. IV, pp. 87-9.

Old Kittery and her families
By Everett Schermerhorn Stackpole
p. 550

Another source:

Stephen Jenkins was killed in the Oyster River Massacre in 1694, his wife, Anne, was carried off to Canada with three children. She later escaped and testified at Chief Bomazeen's trial about the incident, and stated that Stephen Jenkins' grandmother was killed along side him in the 1695 massacre.

Recently found 'administration on the estate of Stephen Jenkins of Oyster River, who was killed by the Indians and left several small children, was granted to his brother, Jabez Jenkins of Kittery, Maine.' and 'Bomazeen the Indian Chief that controlled the Indian raids at Oyster River and surrounding area. He was a fearless warrior who killed many of the early settlers in 1694. He was captured and sent to Boston where was put on trial. Several witnesses of the massacre spoke against him. Bomazeen escaped with his life at the trial, but was later slain in an attack on the Norridgewock's village in 1724.'Bomazeen died that August day in 1724 as he rushed to warn the Norridgewock mission that the English troops, led by Captain Jeremiah Moulton, Captain Johnson Harmon, Captain John Brown and Captain Joseph Bean were on their way to destroy them. Captain Moulton had tried before, but today he would not fail. Chief Bomazeen perished in a hail of gunfire as he attempted to cross the Kennebec River. This beautiful spot in the river is known today as Bomazeen Rips.
We also know that Chief Bomazeen was at the brutal massacre of York, Maine. And in the oddest twist of fate, this is the very place where a five year old Jerimiah Moulton was taken hostage by the Indians and marched along with 100 other pilgrims up the Kennebec River to Norridgewock. Little Jeremiah was later released in an instance of gratitude to the English for releasing some Indian hostages. Who would have guessed that years later Jeremiah Moulton now Captain Moulton would return to Norridgewock to exact his revenge.
Chief Bomazeen was taken hostage in an act of treachery by the English in the 1696 and held in a brutal Boston prison on Deer Island. It was here, while starved, beaten and emaciated that he is said to have told his English captors (according to clergyman Cotton Mather) that his French teachers (the Jesuit Father Sebastian Rale) had instructed the Indians that “Jesus Christ was of the French Nation and that his mother, the Virgin Mary, was a French woman: that the English had been his murders: that he rose and went to heaven, and that all who would gain his favor must revenge his quarrel upon the English as much as possible.
Many argue that Chief Bomazeen never spoke these words, but none the less, the English belief that the French friars were active in inciting the Indians to commit depredations upon the English settlers led the General Court of Massachusetts to pass an act to eject them entirely from the colony.